posted on Dec, 1 2008 @ 10:31 AM
I own two pickup trucks. One is a 1987 Chevy Silverado. It's a beautiful truck, solid black with plenty of chrome trim, and the old 305 Pontiac
powerplant runs like a dream. But it does have a few problems. The electrical system tends to have a lot of glitches from poorly-designed connectors,
and the switch between the gas tanks (dual-tank system) has never worked right. It's a brand-new switch, and won't maintain contact. But returning
it will do no good, as every single switch I have checked at the parts stores is the same way. I have a piece of electrical tape holding it closed
until I get time to build something that will switch the tanks electronically so I can still have the 'original' switch in my dash instead of some
homemade-looking apparatus.
The transmission went out a while back, forcing me to intrude upon a co-worker to get back and forth to work for a few days (I was driving a local
dump truck at the time). On the way home one day, I saw a 1980 Chevy LUV pickup for sale. I bought it, because I used to have one that made a great
little truck.
For those who aren't familiar with the LUV, it was a transition vehicle. It has Chevy nameplates all over it. But open the hood and right across the
top of the valve cover is the word 'ISUZU' embossed in the aluminum in big bold letters. Every piece of that truck was made in Japan at Isuzu Motors
including the Chevrolet emblems, and every piece was assembled in Japan as well. Completed trucks were shipped back to Chevrolet to be sold.
I get about 30 miles per gallon in the little thing. It's not that great at hauling large loads, but it tries its little four-banger heart out when
pushed. It's still got a carburetor which needs tuned from time to time. It has a bolt in the distributer to loosen it for timing adjustment. Simple.
Efficient. Tough. And not very expensive when they were new.
You see, the idea was that since American workers were so expensive and Japanese workers were so cheap, that Chevrolet could save money by having the
LUV built overseas. The people who made that decision were paid handsomely for this, because it saved Chevrolet money and that is the only thing that
is considered where CEO bonuses are concerned. So everyone was happy. Chevrolet saved money, Isuzu got work, there was still enough jobs for the
American auto workers, there was work for Japanese auto workers, and the people got a cheap, efficient, good truck.
But what Chevrolet executives did not see was that now Isuzu had experience making trucks. They took that experience and the knowledge gleaned from
the deal, and became a competitor. Now Chevrolet has to share a portion of the market with Isuzu.
Toyota used to make tiny little cars that would barely make it from point 'A' to point 'B'. I remember seeing one, sitting in a pile of rust at
the edge of an old hayfield. It was a three-cylinder with three magnetos. Everything was undersized and it made for some good laughs as I checked it
out. Now, 30 years later, Toyota has taken the lessons they learned from those laughable cars and emerged as a major player in the auto industry. Why?
They began making parts for American companies to 'reduce costs'... again increasing executive bonuses.
the whole time, the AFL-CIO was busy padding their own pockets. The leaders made great salaries, and since the only way they could remain in power was
to keep the workers happy, they did so by increasing the price of labor to artificial levels that were simply too high for the market to bear.
Economic pressures from time to time kept driving sales to the cheaper to buy and cheaper to drive Asian cars, and this demand allowed the Japanese to
increase their work force and try new ideas by investing in technology rather than CEO bonuses.
Now we have the results of this great experiment: American auto manufacturers have high-paid employees, both in the labor and executive positions, but
not enough sales to support them. The Japanese have well-paid people in these positions as well, but plenty of sales. All because of the
short-sightedness of GM, Ford, and Chrysler in their dealings with those they at the time considered 'inferior' and those executives they endowed
with power to destroy in order to profit.
Since Henry Ford's initial dream of 'a car in every garage', we have seen the American auto industry excel and succeed beyond Mr. Ford's wildest
dreams. We then saw in the last 20 years how this dream has evaporated amid individual greed and lust for individual power. Who is to blame? The labor
unions who demanded too much? The CEOs who allowed competition to thrive while ignoring their own companies in favor of personal profits? The
competitors like Toyota, Mitsubishi, and Isuzu who took full advantage of the situation? How about the politicians who allowed and even encouraged
this through agreements like NAFTA and tax incentives to move manufacturing overseas, while playing CEO through the passage of more and more
environmental regulations to make the product more expensive and complicated?
They're all to blame. We're all to blame. 'Buy American' makes a great slogan, but if it is no more than a slogan, it is just a slogan. The only
way to get back to where we were is to allow the entire economy to collapse around our ears and build it back again, with all of the pain and
sacrifice that built it i the first place. Actually more, because now we have competition.
TheRedneck